Ric Wheeler wrote:
One key is not to replace the drives too early - you often can recover
significant amounts of data from a drive that is on its last legs.
This can be useful even in RAID rebuilds since with today's enormous
drive capacities, you might hit a latent error during the rebuild on
one of the presumed healthy drives.
Of course, if you don't have a spare drive in your configuration, this
is not practical...
Why would you have a spare drive? That's a wasted spindle.
You want to have spare capacity, enough for one or two (or fifteen)
drives' worth of data. When a drive goes bad, you rebuild into the
spare capacity you have.
When you replace the drive, the filesystem moves data into the new drive
to take advantage of the new spindle.
--
error compiling committee.c: too many arguments to function
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